Election In June 2009, Wharton announced his intentions to run for mayor of Memphis in a
special election to replace Mayor
Willie Herenton, who vacated the office soon after being elected to his fifth term in order to run again for superintendent of the city school board. Wharton won the election in a landslide, receiving 60 percent of the vote in a field of twenty-five candidates. Wharton was sworn into office on October 26, 2009. He was the fourth African American to serve as
Mayor of Memphis (previous African-American mayors were J. O. Patterson Jr.,
W. W. Herenton, and
Myron Lowery). He was the second African American (after Herenton) to be elected to that office. He was re-elected in
2011, winning 65 percent of the vote.
Tenure In 2010, Wharton pledged to build over 50 miles of bicycle lanes and associated facilities in Memphis. Memphis had been ranked as one of America's worst cities for cycling by
Bicycling magazine in 2008. The
Memphis Greenline was completed and bike lanes were designated throughout the city. There are plans for further expansion with the aid of a $15 million federal grant. In September 2013, a
U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation report recognized Memphis as a paradigm for a government focused on job creation, crime reduction, and economic growth. The Chamber cited development strategies created by Wharton's "Innovation Delivery Team" in praising Memphis. Wharton has been criticized for awarding contracts to his friends, underfunding
Memphis City Schools, underfunding the
Memphis Police Department and for cutting services for young people and the elderly, while offering incentive packages to corporate interests. He has reiterated his commitment to economic development and job creation, to benefit all citizens. Wharton publicly disagreed with the 2010
Forbes ranking of Memphis as the
Most Miserable City in America. By 2013, four years into Wharton's tenure as mayor, Memphis no longer appeared on that
Forbes list of miserable cities in any rank. On June 17, 2014, the Memphis City Council passed Wharton's budget "that includes Mayor A C Wharton's plan to cut retiree and current employee health benefits". Under Wharton's budget, all current city employees and retirees (under the age of 65) (including Police and Fire) would have to pay 24% in increased health insurance premiums. City Retirees over the age of 65 now have to pay 100% of their health insurance premiums. In
2015, Wharton lost re-election to former city councilman
Jim Strickland, winning 22 percent of the vote to Strickland's 41 percent.
Lawsuits In 2010, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency and the
Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation filed a joint federal lawsuit against the city administration for violating the
Clean Water Act and the state Water Quality Control Act. In 2011 on a different issue, city employees filed a federal class action suit against the Wharton administration, claiming that his budget and relations with the city union violated city employees'
First Amendment and the
Fourteenth Amendment rights. ==Personal life==